Shouldn't you got the pick the morality of the car you're in? Which will probably ends up with everyone choosing to protect themselves. And if that causes too much externality to society (some kind of Prisoner Dilemma where everyone tries to protect themselves being the worst?), then we have regulation step in and regulate the morality of the systems.
It's not going to be easy, but I don't agree it's harder than the gazillions moral choice we already made as a society nowadays.
harder than the gazillions moral choice we already made.
Im not so sure on that. The two closest things I can find, that address something "remotely close" are the following, and they more or less drag the law into it (sadly) but it is a sort of moral arbiter:
There is a quote in the Dudley and Stephens one that is rather interesting:
"We are often compelled to set up standards we cannot reach ourselves, and to lay down rules which we could not ourselves satisfy. But a man has no right to declare temptation to be an excuse, though he might himself have yielded to it, nor allow compassion for the criminal to change or weaken in any manner the legal definition of the crime."
It's not going to be easy, but I don't agree it's harder than the gazillions moral choice we already made as a society nowadays.